Muttshack Animal Rescue was featured on ABC Eyewitness News, a segment of On The Road with Jason Davis.
To view this informative video of footage of Muttshack volunteer's rescue efforts at the New Orleans compound set up at Lake Castle School, click here.
You'll see Muttshack's "Mash" operations and Muttshackers in action. And, you'll hear the real story of what's going on with the "holocaust" of abondoned animals in New Orleans.
At a recent event in Los Angeles, founder Amanda St John was honored with special awards from the House of Representatives and the City of Los Angeles for rescue efforts and community service.
Amanda returned to New Orleans after a brief visit back home to recover from a flu, and is continuing her animal rescue work, stationed at the Lake Castle School there. Muttshack's search and rescue efforts are now focused on catching the animals roaming around the streets of New Orleans, and support is vitally needed there (both in terms of donations and more Muttshack volunteers).
Mark Percy said he thought he had seen a ghost when he pushed open the flood-swollen door of his parents' home in eastern New Orleans and encountered the family's black cocker spaniel, Sabu.
The dog was still alive despite being entombed in the dank, moldy ranch house for more than five weeks. Sabu had been stashed in the attic at the onset of the flooding, but in the intervening days, he had fallen through the damp ceiling onto the ground floor. "He scared me to death," said Percy, 20, marveling at the emaciated creature that rolled in the dry grass and lapped pellets of kibble from the sidewalk. "He's a soldier. At best, I thought somebody got him. I thought he'd be dead."
The somebody that Percy hoped would have gotten the trapped dog was one of the hundreds of animal rescuers from across the country who wandered New Orleans in the days and weeks after Hurricane Katrina, checking lists of pet-owner addresses, listening for barks, looking for furred faces in windows and otherwise searching for trapped animals. Their hand-marked vehicles, crowbar house break-ins and caged survivors were a leitmotif of the storm and flood's aftermath.
But though animal rescues continued this week in largely empty neighborhoods, and though the resilience of domesticated animals -- from house cats to lap dogs to exotic birds -- was sometimes astonishing, time was no longer on their side.
Amanda St. John, the founder of Muttshack, a volunteer rescue organization based in Los Angeles, said the condition of the animals being brought to Muttshack's Hayne Boulevard headquarters in Lake Castle Private School had deteriorated since the first weeks of the rescue. Predictably, the animals were becoming "skinnier and sicker and quieter."
"A lot of homeowners are coming home to dead and dying animals," she said.
The disposition of the animals had also changed. Gone were the gregarious dogs prancing toward their rescuers, replaced by sullen frightened creatures who had begun adapting to life on the street. Cages in the rescuer's canine compound were marked with red labels designating animals too hostile to handle.
One recent afternoon, Karen O'Toole of Chicago and Nancy Cleveland of Los Angeles, two of Muttshack's most dedicated rescuers, cruised the gray junk-strewn New Orleans neighborhoods -- neighborhoods that were sometimes disheveled even before Katrina -- conducting still another stray cat sweep. As their white van lurched from place to place, braking abruptly at any sign of life, they tore open small packages of pet food, tossing them from the moving vehicle like beads from a Mardi Gras float. The two women's hands were punctured and scratched from handling cats.
"Now we're seeing strays everywhere," O'Toole said. "Whether their owners were told to leave them off or if they were released when the owners evacuated, there are poodles to pit bulls running loose. In a normal city, a stray can rummage through the garbage at a restaurant or convenience store, but here there's nothing. We put out food everywhere, but there's a handful of us, we can't rescue a city of pets."
In the course of a few hours, O'Toole and Cleveland collected four stray cats from t cages that had been set and tried unsuccessfully to coax a wary dog toward them on Ursuline Street. John Williams, a neighbor watching the scene, said the dog looked "like a damn hyena." But that furtive stray seemed tame compared to the pair of wildly barking pit bulls on Gov. Nicholls Street. Too violent to safely noose, they were fed in place.
"Animals act differently now," O'Toole said, "not because they're mean but because they're scared. Cute little poodles will tear your head off."
To emphasize the grimness of the situation, the women broke from the hunt from time to time to give macabre tours of houses and yards where, despite their efforts, animals have perished. A chow in the Lafitte public housing development seemed to have melted into the rug where he starved to death. A mummified pit bull hanged from his leash on an eastern New Orleans fence where he may have strangled as flood waters receded. A cat skeleton peeked from beneath a pile of rubble. The rescuers recall a small dog, alive but too weak to move, that had presumably been put out with the trash in front of a home. Another dog, found in a bathroom, barely had the strength to raise its head to greet rescuers.
"This is an animal holocaust," Cleveland said.
Some pets abandoned
Though the ad hoc animal rescue operation that saved the lives of thousands of pets in the weeks after Katrina is a humanitarian success, controversy simmers around the zealotry of some of the rescuers, who blithely broke into homes to save animals they felt were in jeopardy, regardless of whether they had been contacted by animal owners. O'Toole and Cleveland believe the lives of the animals outweighed the rights of the owners.
"I thought when they opened the city, people would rush back to get their pets," O'Toole said, "but some people have just abandoned them. We were told to no longer be going into people's residences as of last Wednesday, but we're working in neighborhoods where the houses are condemned."
As an example of their approach, Cleveland and O'Toole mentioned breaking into every apartment in a complex in eastern New Orleans that they believed had been abandoned and doomed to demolition. O'Toole said she had learned to divine the presence of dogs and cats by certain exterior clues. If she saw a dog figurine in a window, she would search for a dog. If a house had an abundance of house plants or decoration, she would suspect a cat.
"I've never felt bad about breaking a window once," said O'Toole.
Back at the Hayne Boulevard headquarters, a dog handler walked a terribly skinny German shepherd on the parking lot. The animal's head was tilted disconcertingly to one side, the apparent result either of chemical toxins or a severe ear infection. He paced unsurely in tight circles. Elsewhere on the parking lot a skeletal chow was bathed to remove dirt and possible pollutants. The dog had gone deaf and blind for unknown reasons. Another chow, also blind and rescued from beneath the same house, lay forlornly in a cage in the veterinary station.
"Now the animals we're seeing are much more critical," said Muttshack veterinarian Sabra Lucas of Troutville, Va. "We're seeing a lot of chemical burns, skin sloughing, emaciation, severe dehydration -- basically, they're just starved."
No euthanasia
Despite the near-death condition of some of the animals, the veterinarians have euthanized none. St. John says that, curiously, the most damaged animals are often the first to be adopted once they've reached evacuation sites. "Old people take old dogs, people with heart conditions take dogs with heart conditions, people with a limp take dogs with a limp," she said.
Several owners have appeared at the Muttshack compound to retrieve lost pets, or surrender ownership, but the majority of the animals remain unclaimed. These castaways are cataloged, photographed and implanted with microchips to help reunite them with their owners, should their owners reappear, before they're taken away to "no-kill" shelters, then foster homes across the country. The animal shelter at the Lamar Dixon Expo Center in Gonzales, a clearing house for thousands of rescued animals, closed Oct. 10.
Even at the height of the rescue effort, the reuniting of animals and their owners has been a hit-or-miss endeavor, plagued by mistaken identities, clerical errors and miscommunication. St. John believes that though Muttshack continues occasionally to reunite animals with their owners, the possibilities are becoming slimmer.
Everybody who had an animal had a lottery ticket," she said. "If we found your dog, if anyone found your dog, you won the lottery. The truth is, the chances of winning are small."
St. John expects Muttshack to remain in New Orleans until January.
ANIMAL RESCUE GROUP TO ACCEPT KATRINA PETS FROM RETURNING NEW ORLEANS RESIDENTS
Pet Owners Who Find Surviving Animals Can Bring Pets To MuttShack Animal Rescue Shelter at Lake Castle School
New Orleans, La., October 6, 2005--As the people of New Orleans return to their homes for the first time in more than a month, many residents are finding their pets still alive and waiting either in the homes or yards where they were left.
MuttShack Animal Rescue, an animal rescue group currently working on the ground in New Orleans, is encouraging residents to bring animals to their shelter facility in New Orleans. “We know residents are overwhelmed right now. People who have a pet that survived can bring their animals to our or another shelter, or call a shelter to pick the animal up,” said Amanda St. John, founder of MuttShack. “We’re asking returning resident to please not leave the pet in their home, hoping we will find him. Many of these pets can be saved with medical assistance and put up for foster or surrendered for adoption. We can help these pets—even those that appear very thin or sick can be treated at no cost to the owners.”
Animal rescue workers around the city have assisted returning residents who surrendered their animals that survived the hurricane and month-long evacuation. For returning residents who have decided to surrender their animal, rescue groups are placing these surviving animals into new permanent homes.
Residents should call any animal shelter and tell shelter workers where the animal is located or take the animal to Muttshack Animal Rescue at the Lake Castle School at the corner of Hayne Road and Crowder Boulevard.
MuttShack Animal Rescue is a non-profit volunteer driven organization. Members from across the United States have come to assist the families of New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina. Thousands of animals have been rescued from homes and off the streets. Rescued animals have been given veterinary care. Pets’ have been micro-chipped and their information carefully documented. The pets are taken to foster facilities where every possible action will be taken to reunite them with their owners.
People can find missing pets at www.petfinder.com online where all rescued animals are registered. Animals rescued from homes have been placed in foster care and will be reunited with those owners who claim their pets.
MuttShack Animal Rescue does not draw on any of the finances of either local or state government, but depends instead on donations from individuals and corporations to help pay for critical needs, veterinary supplies, water, food and rescue equipment. Donations are still needed to assist Katrina animals and can be made online at MuttShack Animal Rescuehttps://www.registrationfactory.com/v3/?EventUUID=B47421FD, or click the donation link at www.muttshack.org, and by calling 866-718-1001.